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NYU's Dirty Money Project, is part of a larger project looking into New York City's "MetaGenome" -- which seeks to examine the "microbes all around us, they may be able to identify potential health threats, fight flu epidemics, and even chart the environmental impact of major storms."

"The most surprising thing is that we didn't find as much human DNA as we would have thought," said Jane Carlton, director of genome sequencing at NYU's Center for Genomics and Systems Biology, adding that people tend to lick their fingers when counting money.

The unpublished study examined 80 circulating $1 bills in New York City between two periods - winter (February 2013) and summer (July 2013).

Researchers extracted DNA from the bills and analyzed them using environmental metagenomic sequencing.

They identified DNA from several different sources including E.Coli (food poisoning), bacillus cereus (food-borne illiness) staphylococcus aureus (skin infections) and about half was from human DNA.

There was a variation between the type of DNA found on the money due to usage patterns, environment or season.

Of the paper bills they examined, researchers discovered that there was viable bacteria present.

Microbes, or microscopic organisms, are found on many surfaces - from restrooms, airplanes and buses. They are transferred through human contact.

The average $1 bill is made of 75 percent cotton and 25 percent linen. It has an estimated lifespan of about 22 months, according to the Bureau of Engraving and Printing.

Other countries print their currency on flexible plastic polymer film - to make their cash more durable to normal wear and tear. Some studies have shown that was less bacteria on plastic polymer based currency than cotton cash.